REDLANDS >> Nearly a year after law enforcement raided the townhouse that was home to the couple behind the San Bernardino terrorist attack, there are no visible signs of the chaos that attracted worldwide attention.

The townhouse where Syed Rizwan Farook and his wife, Tashfeen Malik, plotted the Dec. 2, 2015, attack at the Inland Regional Center, has since been renovated and has a new tenant.

Another resident at the complex says life in there has returned to normal, though she and her neighbors are much more aware of one another.

“All my neighbors are making more of an effort to tell each other our names and smile more,” said Annie Frost, who has lived in the neighborhood since 2008. “I think we are just being more aware of who’s around us. There seems to be a more concerted effort by all the people here since then.”

Frost lives next door to the townhouse that became the focal point for law enforcement hours after Farook and Malik killed 14 people and wounded 22 others. Law enforcement found thousands of rounds of ammunition, pipe bombs and pipe bomb-making materials.

Frost said she was home with her son that day, and learned from a neighbor that law enforcement planned to raid the townhouse next door.

“When they told me that, I never experienced so much fear and anxiety,” she said. “I just tried to stay calm.”

Frost took her son to a family member’s house where she watched the raid on her neighbors’ home unfold on television.

“It was surreal — I really don’t know how else to describe it — and terrifying,” Frost said. “Absolutely terrifying.”

When Frost returned home the next day, she said, the weight of what happened hit hard.

“The streets were all blocked off. It was like a ghost town — FBI agents everywhere,” she said. “When I saw the door blown and glass everywhere, I just broke down and cried.”

The raid drew the attention of local, national and international media, many of whom got a glimpse inside the townhouse after the FBI finished its investigation.

The media attention soon died off, said Redlands police Cmdr. Chris Catren, and the department has not seen an increase in incidents there after the raid.

“We didn’t see any big increase in activity over there outside of what we asked everybody to do, which is just report anything suspicious they see no matter where they live,” Catren said.

Catren said activity in the neighborhood is consistent with other apartment communities in Redlands.

“As a department we get a lot of suspicious subject and suspicious vehicle calls, which is part of our campaign of ‘See Something, Say Something,’” Catren said. “That generates a lot of those types of calls all throughout the city.”

Frost said she met Farook and would see him coming home from work or getting the mail, but never noticed anything suspicious.

When responding to speculation in the media about what the neighbors knew, Frost said there wasn’t anything to say.

“These things happen, but there’s always hope,” Frost said. “Not all your neighbors are bad. There’s always hope, and people and the community can’t be fearful.”

Doyle and Judy Miller, who own the townhouse, renovated it before briefly putting it on the market. Rather than sell the property, however, they decided to rent it. The couple had no problem finding a tenant.

Judy Miller said there was interest in renting the townhouse almost immediately after the raid.

“As long as we own it and when we sell it we will have to divulge who lived there because that’s my job, but outside of that there hasn’t been any stigma,” she said. “It’s a good area with lots of wonderful neighbors. It’s really getting more and more people buying in that complex.”

In the year since the raid, Miller said her friends, church and family have helped the couple cope.

“There’s hardly a day that goes by that we’re not reminded of what happened,” she said, “and not a day that goes by that we don’t think about the people that were killed over there and the ones that were injured.”